The Atlantic Slave Trade: A CensusUniversity of Wisconsin Press, 1969 - 338 pages Curtin combines modern research and statistical methods with his broad knowledge of the field to present the first book-length quantitative analysis of the Atlantic slave trade. Its basic evidence suggests revision of currently held opinions concerning the place of the slave trade in the economies of the Old World nations and their American colonies. |
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... Jamaica , combined with Le Page's calculations of Jamaican slave imports before 1701. As Table 14 and Fig . 2 indicate , the slave populations of Barbados and Jamaica rose at a similar rate in the seventeenth century , but Jamaica's ...
... Jamaica , mainly to the Spanish possessions . 5 At first sight , this net import of 12,000 slaves into Jamaica from the eastern Caribbean might seem , for the purpose of estimating Jamaican slave imports , to be no different from ...
... Jamaica , p . 36 ; Le Page , “ Jamaican Creole , " p . 74 ; B. Edwards , West Indies , 1 : 224 . Jamaica of 1673-1702 and Barbados of 1645-72 is valid , then Barbados should have had a similar rate of net natural decrease . In fact ...
Table des matières
of the Literature | 3 |
The Hispanic Trade | 15 |
ropeans | 51 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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